How do I keep my hands inside my golf swing?
“Keep your hands inside the club head as you swing back to waist level”. This is an especially good thought for the open-clubface-at-impact slicer. Most of these slicers create their open clubface because they roll the club wide-open during the first three feet of the swing.
How do I stop my golf swinging outside?
Solution: hold it back. Take the club back with both hands, and then hook the shaft with your right index finger. As you swing down, keep the hinge in your left wrist by resisting the swing with your right index finger (above). When it’s time to hit shots, remember this feeling of resistance in the transition.
When to swing the clubhead outside the hands?
If it points in front of you, good – the clubhead is outside your hands. If it’s already parallel to the target line or pointing behind you, your takeaway is too far inside. Continue swinging back until the shaft is parallel to the ground at hip height.
How to think clubhead outside the hands for solid takeaway?
A simple way to instill a “clubhead outside the hands” takeaway is to keep the butt of the club pointing at the right hip as it passes by. If the butt points left of this spot, you’ve got too much wrist action and/or an inside path. Be mindful of the rotation of your forearms on the takeaway.
What does it mean to keep the club outside the hands?
You’ll often hear pro golfers and instructors refer to “keeping the clubhead outside the hands” on the takeaway. (“Hands inside the clubhead” means the same thing.) This puts the club on a square path and increases your chances of making an on-plane swing.
What does ” hands inside the clubhead ” mean in golf?
(“Hands inside the clubhead” means the same thing.) This puts the club on a square path and increases your chances of making an on-plane swing. To determine if your hands and clubhead are properly positioned, assume your normal golf stance with a full-length mirror to your right (left, if you’re left-handed).